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Mixing blogs with magazine format

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Associated Press

After Red Herring sank into the dot-com morass last year, Tony Perkins considered resurrecting the magazine that helped establish him as a Silicon Valley sage. He changed his mind when his college-age daughter scoffed and told him “Red Herring is so 1990s.”

So Perkins’ return to the high-tech publishing scene will be narrower and perhaps riskier for that.

The new venture, AlwaysOn, will bring one of the Internet’s hottest trends -- Web logging, or “blogging” -- to print.

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The quarterly magazine, scheduled to debut early next year, will draw heavily from material that has already appeared online at www.alwayson-network.com -- a technology-focused blogging community that Perkins created after Red Herring’s collapse.

About half the so-called blogozine will be devoted to the most provocative posts on his website, like a recent debate about whether a new computer video game re-creating the assassination of President John F. Kennedy should be rated more obscene than online pornography.

The rest of the magazine will feature longer articles about technology’s future and interviews with the likes of Microsoft Corp. founder Bill Gates and Hewlett-Packard Co. chief executive Carly Fiorina.

Perkins, 46, hopes to make money through advertising and an annual $49 subscription that delivers copies of the blogozine and special privileges at the AlwaysOn website.

Even before the blogozine hits the newsstand, Perkins is aggressively promoting it as a breakthrough development in “open-source media.”

Others aren’t so certain.

Jason Pontin, Red Herring’s editor during the San Francisco-based magazine’s heyday, is among the skeptics, although he still praises his former boss as “a very brilliant man, a beloved figure in Silicon Valley and an extraordinary self-promoter.”

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Pontin has serious doubts about whether the raw, openly biased observations that attract loyal followings to the online “blogosphere” will fare as well in the more circumspect realm of magazines, where full-time reporters routinely spend weeks researching stories and then submit their findings to rigorous fact checking.

“The blogosphere doesn’t have the capacity to produce analytical, well-researched journalism,” said Pontin, now editor in chief of Technology Review, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology’s monthly magazine. “If you believe there are enough people interested in reading a magazine devoted to a bunch of insiders writing with great jubilation about the importance of their own community, then Tony’s approach could be quite effective.”

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